Crim1 (Definition)
Crim1 (Definition)
Crim1 (Definition)
2. ACTIVE CRIMINAL - noninstitutionalized not in prison and not under any sort of
formal supervision such as parole or probation, who are actively engaged in
offending.
3. ACUTE CRIMINAL - person who violates the Criminal Law because of Impulse
of the Criminal Law because of Impulse of the moment, passion or anger or spell
of extreme moment, passion or anger or spell of extreme jealousy.
10. CIVIL STATUS - It includes several situations, including being single, married,
divorced or in a common-law relationship and whether or not you have children.
A person cannot discriminate or harass you because of your civil status.
12. COMPLEX CRIME - one where the offender has to commit an offense as a
means for the commission of another offense.
13. CONSUMMATED CRIME - when all the elements necessary for its execution
and accomplishment are present.
22. ECONOMIC APPROACH - The approach to index number theory that assumes
that the observed price and quantity data are generated as solutions to various
economic optimization problems.
24. ENRICO FERRI - the reason of crime is not completely determined by the
individual's biological genes, but the result of the combination of physiological
genes, natural conditions and social environment.
25. FELONY AS A CRIME - punishable by imprisonment for longer than one year.
26. FREEDOM - the power or right to act, speak, or think as one wants without
hindrance or restraint.
27. FRUSTRATED CRIME - the offender performs all the acts of execution which
should produce the felony as a consequence, but which, nevertheless, do not
produce it by reason of causes independent of the will of the perpetrator.
28. GRAVITY OF PENALTY - The basis is the penalty prescribed by the RPC and
not the actual penalty imposed by the court.
29. HABITUAL CRIMINAL - It will be seen that an accused can only be deemed an
habitual criminal if he had been convicted and sentenced at least three times by
the courts of this country for any of the crimes of robbery, larceny, estafa,
embezzlement or forgery, or a violation of the laws against vagrancy or
prostitution.
30. INSANE CRIMINALS - a mental illness or disease that makes it impossible for a
defendant to know they were committing a crime or to understand that their
actions are wrong.
31. INTELLIGENCE - the ability to acquire and apply knowledge and skills.
32. LAW - the discipline and profession concerned with the customs, practices, and
rules of conduct of a community that are recognized as binding.
33. LIGHT FELONIES - those infractions of law or the commission of which the
penalty of arresto menor or a fine not exceeding Forty thousand pesos (₱40,000)
or both is provided.
37. OCCASIONAL CRIMINAL - When a person sees his wife, sister, or any female
relative with a stranger in objectionable situation and due to emotional shock.
38. OLD PENAL CODE - Code of Kalantiyaw, purported pre-Spanish Philippine
penal code claimed to have been written in 1433 and discovered on the island of
Panay in 1614.
43. PRE-CLASICAL ERA - During the 17th century, the demonological theory
flourished in Europe with the dominance of the church and religion.
44. PROFESSIONAL CRIMINAL - a person who has made crime his or her
livelihood, that is, a person who depends upon criminal activities for at least a
substantial portion of his or her income, and who has developed special, related
skills.
45. PUBLIC ORDER - is a condition characterized by the absence of widespread
criminal and political violence, such as kidnapping, murder, riots, arson, and
intimidation against targeted groups or individuals.
46. REVISED PENAL LAWS - criminalizes a whole class of acts that are generally
accepted as criminal, such as the taking of a life whether through murder or
homicide, rape, robbery and theft, and treason.
49. SPECIAL PENAL LAWS - special laws which are intended merely as
amendments to certain provisions of the Revised Penal Code are mala in se and
still subject to its provision.